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						Xi says trade talks progress, more meetings next week in 
						U.S
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		 [February 15, 2019]   
		By Michael Martina 
 BEIJING (Reuters) - Talks between China and 
		the United States this week made important progress, President Xi 
		Jinping told top U.S. trade negotiators on Friday, adding that efforts 
		would continue in Washington next week to resolve their bruising trade 
		war.
 
 Xi met U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer and U.S. Treasury 
		Secretary Steven Mnuchin after a full week of trade negotiations at 
		senior and deputy levels in Beijing, and called for a deal both sides 
		could accept, state media said.
 
 U.S. duties on $200 billion worth of imports from China are set to rise 
		to 25 percent from 10 percent if no deal is reached by March 1 to 
		address U.S. demands that China curb forced technology transfers and 
		better enforce intellectual property rights.
 
 After the conclusion of talks, which included a banquet on Thursday, 
		Mnuchin said on Twitter that he and Lighthizer had held "productive 
		meetings" with Xi's top economic adviser, Vice Premier Liu He.
 
		
		 
		
 "The consultations between the two sides' teams achieved important 
		step-by-step progress," Xi said, according to state television.
 
 "Next week, both sides will meet again in Washington. I hope you will 
		continue efforts to advance reaching a mutually beneficial, win-win 
		agreement," Xi said during a meeting at Beijing's Great Hall of the 
		People.
 
 He added that China was willing to take a "cooperative approach" to 
		settling bilateral trade frictions.
 
 Lighthizer told Xi the senior officials had "two very good days" of 
		talks.
 
 "We feel that we have made headway on very, very important, and very 
		difficult issues. We have additional work to do but we are hopeful," 
		Lighthizer said, according to a foreign media pool video.
 
 Neither country has yet offered new details on how the world's two 
		largest economies might de-escalate the tariff war that has roiled 
		financial markets and disrupted manufacturing supply chains.
 
 Although U.S. President Donald Trump said this week that an extension of 
		the tariff deadline was possible if a "real deal" was close, Larry 
		Kudlow, director of the National Economic Council, has said the White 
		House had made no such decision.
 
 But several sources informed about the meetings told Reuters there was 
		little indication negotiators had made major progress on sticking points 
		to pave the way for a potential meeting between Xi and Trump in coming 
		weeks to hammer out a deal.
 
 "Stalemate on the important stuff," said one of the sources, all of whom 
		requested anonymity because the talks are confidential.
 
 "There's still a lot of distance between parties on structural and 
		enforcement issues," said a second source. "I wouldn't quite call it 
		hitting a wall, but it's not a field of dreams either."
 
 A third source told Reuters the White House was "irate" over earlier 
		reports that the Trump administration was considering a 60-day extension 
		of the tariff deadline.
 
 
		
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			U.S. trade delegation member Gilbert Kaplan leaves a hotel in 
			Beijing, China February 15, 2019. REUTERS/Jason Lee 
            
			 
Lighthizer and Mnuchin left their Beijing hotel on Friday afternoon without 
taking questions from reporters. 
'SLEIGHT OF HAND'
 Reuters reported earlier that in recent meetings China has pledged to make its 
industrial subsidy programs compliant with World Trade Organization rules and 
end those that distort markets, but had offered no details of how it will do so.
 
 The offer has been met with scepticism from U.S. negotiators, in part because 
China has long refused to disclose its subsidies.
 
 And some in U.S. industry have been unimpressed with the extent of other 
reported Chinese offers to address U.S. concerns, such as Beijing's proposal to 
hike purchases of U.S. semiconductors to $200 billion over six years.
 
 
John Neuffer, president and chief executive of the Semiconductor Industry 
Association (SIA), told Reuters the offer would be "akin to an accounting 
sleight of hand" and "an attempt to rearrange our supply chains and drive them 
deeper into China".
 Neuffer added, "We are confident U.S. government negotiators will wisely dismiss 
this offer and continue pushing for meaningful reforms that create a fair and 
level playing field for U.S. companies doing business in China."
 
 The proposal, first reported by the Wall Street Journal, was part of a 
"recycled" package of goods purchase offers that Beijing first presented in the 
spring of 2018, a source told Reuters.
 
Many U.S. lawmakers and business groups have urged Trump in recent weeks not to 
settle for a deal based largely on increased Chinese purchases of farm and 
energy commodities.
 Trump has said he did not expect to meet Xi before March 1, but White House 
spokeswoman Sarah Sanders has raised the possibility of a meeting between the 
leaders at the president's Mar-a-Lago retreat in Florida.
 
 China has long denied Washington's accusations of trade abuses, and it has 
retaliated to U.S. tariffs with its own duties on American goods.
 
 
 Some trade experts say China appears focused on securing a Xi-Trump meeting, in 
the hope that it would make a near-term deal to limit or reduce tariffs more 
likely.
 
 (Reporting by Michael Martina; Additional reporting by Lusha Zhang, Min Zhang, 
and Philip Wen; Editing by Kim Coghill and Clarence Fernandez)
 
				 
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